L8: Improve Your Communication Skills



L8: Improve Your Communication Skills

INTRODUCTION

As a career and technical teacher, you are responsible for communicating your subject matter to your students. You have, or will have, at your disposal the competencies (knowledge, skills, and attitudes) that comprise technical expertise in your occupational specialty. Communicating these competencies to your students is an essential step in helping them develop their own occupational skills.

However, some students with special needs may be lacking in communication skills—may not be able to receive your message. Students with learning disabilities or students with limited English proficiency, for instance, may have low English language skills. Adults in retraining programs or students enrolled in programs nontraditional for their gender may have well developed language skills in general but may lack a basic technical vocabulary. Disabling conditions can affect students’ ability to communicate—a student with a hearing impairment cannot hear a lecture, a student with a visual impairment cannot see the board.

How can you communicate your subject matter to students in spite of these limitations?

Furthermore, many difficulties can arise in using nonverbal communication with students with special needs. Students from different minority or cultural backgrounds may communicate nonverbally in ways to which you are not accustomed.

If, for example, you are a white, middle-class American, you will expect your students to look you right in the eye when talking to you. This indicates respect and honesty by your own standards. Yet some of your students may come from cultures in which people show respect and honesty by refraining from looking the other person directly in the eye.

How do you avoid the misunderstandings that are likely to occur when these two different ways of showing respect and honesty meet head-on?

This learning guide is designed to give you skill in keeping the lines of communication open, so that you can communicate your technical content to students with special needs and of special populations.

KEEPING THE LINES OF COMMUNICATION OPEN

Imagine that you are a caveman. You and some friends are lounging around the fire late one prehistoric evening. As the fire dies, your friends drop off to sleep. Suddenly, you see two gleaming eyes come out of the darkness toward your cave. Shadows take shape. Light from the dying embers glints off white fangs. A saber-toothed tiger.

You want to wake your friends to signal the danger. But you must be quiet. If the tiger doesn’t realize you are there already, you don’t want to be the one to let him know. A poke in the ribs to one friend doesn’t get much response. The friend looks up, gives you a meaningful glare, and rolls over again. You try shaking another one. For this, you get a fist in the solar plexus.

Finally, in desperation, you throw caution to the winds. Even though you might attract the beast’s attention, you let out a wild, piercing scream, “Gnlaoerfph!!!!” This works; your friends sit bolt upright. Something in your scream has conveyed alarm.

You point to the hungry monster, who now knows that dinner is nearby. At last, your friends get the message, and the campsite explodes into action. One throws twigs on the fire. Two more grab their clubs and spears, just in case. The rest start jumping around and uttering fierce cries.

The tiger, perplexed, begins to back away. You throw a burning stick from the fire at the beast. He turns tail and runs. You are safe.

Why did you and your friends almost become a midnight snack? It occurred because you were unable, at first, to communicate the danger to them. Unfortunately, language had not yet been invented. You couldn’t just turn to the sleeping crowd and yell, “Rise and shine! It’s Fang and he looks hungry.”

You tried to wake them silently, but they figured you were clowning around. They misunderstood your actions. However, they did understand from your scream that danger was near. Pointing to the tiger filled in the rest of the picture. At that point, you could all take action as a group.

This kind of communication problem still exists today. Even with the advantage of language, there are times when we cannot communicate what we mean. Sometimes

language itself is the problem. You may use a word that others do not understand. You may write a sentence that is so complicated that the meaning gets lost. Or, you may be trying to communicate with someone who speaks a different language entirely.

On the other hand, a message sometimes gets confused even though your language is simple and clear. If you want to express affection to a friend, you might choose the words “I like you.” Your message will only get through, however, if you use the appropriate tone of voice and gestures. If you say “I like you” in a sarcastic tone of voice while you roll your eyes and drum your fingers on the table, your friend might very well believe your actions instead of your words.

Communication is essential to you in your professional role as a career and technical instructor. Your main task as a teacher is to communicate the content of your subject to your students—to convey to them the knowledge, skills, and attitudes they need on the job. Thus, you will communicate with your students all day, every day. Often you communicate with them when you are not even present. Some communications from you to your students are as follows:

• Outside reading assignment

• Handout given as outside assignment or for classroom work

• Lecture or demonstration

• Videos or audio recordings for student use

• Writing on the board

• Signs concerning safety and procedures

• Oral or written evaluations of student projects or performance

• Oral questioning of students

Likewise, your students communicate to you all day, every day. Some examples are as follows:

• Questions asked about class lessons

• Questions answered in class

• Oral or written explanations of plans for a project

• Requests for assistance or advice

You and your students even communicate without using language. A student communicates respect or anger, boredom or interest, by posture, gestures, and tone of voice. You communicate patience or impatience, approval or disapproval, by the same means.

In your classroom or laboratory, you will need to be particularly concerned about the effectiveness of your communication with students with special needs. Many students with special needs have communication difficulties that affect their ability to receive your vital content messages.

For example, a hearing-impaired student may be able to read and speak but unable to hear any classroom discussions, demonstrations, or lectures. Similarly, a visually impaired student may hear and speak with ease but run into problems with reading assignments. Students in programs nontraditional for their gender may have excellent communication skills in general but lack basic technical vocabulary in the occupational area. An adult in a retraining program may experience this same lack of basic technical vocabulary.

Students with limited English proficiency may speak and understand English perfectly well but have difficulty reading. Minority students may not be fluent in Standard English, which is generally the language of the classroom and the world of work. A student with an intellectual disability may have low skills in all areas of communication.

These various communication difficulties concern you as a CTE teacher. You must be able to work within students’ present abilities in order to convey your technical content and develop your students’ occupational skills.

Furthermore, if students with special needs have difficulty understanding you, logic tells us that you are likely to have difficulty understanding them. You may have experienced this sort of difficulty already.

Or, you may have met a hearing- or speech-impaired person whose pronunciation was almost unintelligible to you or a gifted person whose vocabulary made you reach for the dictionary.

Since it is just as important for you to understand your students as it is for them to understand you, these difficulties need to be resolved. Communication breaks down whenever one of the people “communicating” doesn’t understand. You need to help avoid this sort of breakdown, regardless of who is or isn’t understanding.

Last, there are communication problems that arise simply because of our attitudes toward “differences.” Dealing with someone from a different cultural background or race, for example, makes some people uncomfortable. It is easy, sometimes, to get the feeling that this other person operates by slightly different rules that you don’t even know about. This feeling of discomfort often leads to a breakdown in communication, even when language itself is not a difficulty, simply because you are not sure of what the other person is thinking and feeling.

Of course, you cannot allow this sort of feeling to stop the communication in your classroom or laboratory. What can be done to avoid a breakdown and to keep the lines of communication open? Let’s begin by taking a closer look at communication.

Communication Defined

Communication can be defined quite simply. It is a message going from a sender to a receiver. The message can contain information of almost any kind. Someone can tell you that one-inch is equal to 25.4mm. You might read that your lawnmower engine develops 3.1 HP.

In your classroom or laboratory, many of your messages will concern the content of your subject. At the same time, however, some will concentrate on the relationships between you and your students.

A conversation you overhear between two students can tell you that they are bored in your class. A student might say that he/she is sorry for having disturbed your class. You may mention to your graduating seniors that you are happy for their sake.

Or, a student might tell you by frowning that your directions are unclear. If you pay students a compliment on their work, they will probably let you know they are happy by smiling. When you ask a question in class, some students will show that they know the answer by raising their hands. Others will show that they don’t know by concentrating on staring at the floor.

As we see from the previous examples, you can send or receive a message in two ways. When a message is sent verbally, language is used. The language can be either spoken or written. The message is said and heard, or written and read. When a message is sent nonverbally, other means are used. These include tone of voice, facial expression, posture, gestures, or actions. We can send (or receive) verbal and nonverbal messages at the same time or separately.

It is important to remember this fact so that you will be aware of all the messages—verbal and nonverbal—that you and your students send and receive. You need to be particularly sensitive to nonverbal messages because they often communicate attitudes or emotions that affect your personal relations with your students. Nonverbal messages often express what a person is really thinking or feeling more accurately than the words he/she uses.

Another important feature of communication is that it is a two-way process. Whenever you communicate, you communicate with someone. We have said that communication consists of a message going from a sender to a receiver. When you are introducing a unit to your class, you are the sender. The content of your unit is the message. Your students are the receivers. When students ask questions, they are the senders, the questions are the messages, and you are the receiver.

Consequently, you must take the two-way nature of the process into account in your classroom or laboratory. If any of the three items (message, sender, receiver) is missing, communication will not occur.

If the receiver is not concentrating on receiving, the message will not get through. If the message itself is unclear or illogical, it will not be understood. If the sender is unconsciously sending out conflicting verbal and nonverbal messages at the same time, the receiver will not know which to choose. The safe arrival of the message—understood by the receiver as it was meant by the sender—is the primary concern.

Communication Skills

There are many things that you, as a CTE teacher, can do to ensure that communication does occur in your classroom. You can help the message arrive—intact and understood—by observing the following rules:

• Ensure that your own communication is active, honest, and fair. This applies whether you are the sender or the receiver of the message. It includes both verbal and nonverbal communication.

• Ensure that verbal messages (spoken and written) you send to students are understandable to all the students in your class. You can gear your approach to your students’ frames of reference. You can provide other means for communicating with students who cannot communicate well in Standard English for any reason. And you can test for understanding to find out if you are being understood or not.

Be Active

Just what do we mean by active? If you’re talking, isn’t that active? If you’re listening, isn’t that active? Sometimes it is, but sometimes just talking or listening isn’t active enough. While you are actively talking, you should actively look for indications that your students are receiving.

If you are introducing a lesson on box-end wrenches to your students, you should be observing their nonverbal communication. If the students are acting bored (e.g., doodling, falling asleep, fiddling with their notebooks, chatting with their neighbors), communication is probably not occurring.

Why might your students be bored? A gifted student could be bored because he/she already knows more about box-end wrenches than you do. A young woman in this particular class might be bored because she doesn’t have the faintest idea why she needs to know about box-end wrenches.

A student with limited English proficiency may be too embarrassed to admit that he/she doesn’t even know what the word wrench means. A student who has never once seen a well-stocked tool box might think that yesterday’s lesson on open-end wrenches covered everything there was to know.

Having actively observed that your students are bored, you would need to remedy this problem. You would need to make sure everyone knows what the word wrench means, what use wrenches have in the occupational area, and what the difference is between an open-end and a box-end wrench.

Likewise, you should actively observe students for signs that they understand what they are receiving. You may have spent hours the night before agonizing over the introduction to your lesson on the box-end wrench. Finally, at 2:00 a.m., you had the brainstorm of the century and concocted the perfect introduction.

Today, unfortunately, your students do not have the good grace to appreciate the high quality of your careful lesson planning. They insist on sitting there giving off signals that say “I don’t get it.” They are scratching their heads, frowning, looking puzzled, and asking many questions.

So, take a hint. Your students are communicating to you—by verbal and nonverbal means—that they do not understand. Back off and start over. Perhaps you have omitted an essential point. Perhaps you have made an incorrect assumption about what they already know. You may be able to salvage the situation by simply filling in that one little gap you didn’t expect to find.

So far, we have talked about being active in sending. How can you be active in receiving? The answer is simple—you can actively look for signs in the message other than words. Let’s say that you stop after class to have a short chat with a minority student. While you are listening, you also pay attention to how well the student speaks English.

He seems to understand what you are saying. He nods his head in agreement, answers questions immediately, and uses his new technical vocabulary appropriately. However, you notice that he speaks rather slowly. None of the other signs you observe indicate boredom or incomprehension or low intelligence, so you wonder if he can understand English better than he can speak it.

Consequently you make a mental note to check the cumulative records, guidance office, other teachers, and so on, to see if you can find out more about the student’s English proficiency. By communicating actively, you have received a message that you wouldn’t otherwise have “heard.”

Also, just hearing often isn’t enough to receive the message. You need to make sure to listen actively or you may miss an essential point. For example, if the student is telling you that the electricity in his house has been turned off, you should hear a little alarm bell go off. How can he read homework assignments if there is no light?

By listening actively, you now know that there was a good reason why he didn’t do the reading assignment. You don’t need to wonder whether he is working conscientiously or not. You may need to spend some time figuring out how to give him assignments that don’t require reading at home, but at least you haven’t made a false assumption about the student’s interest. You have done your part to ensure that the message has arrived intact and understood.

Active listening techniques are techniques commonly used by guidance and advising personnel to create an atmosphere of warmth and empathy in a conference situation. Simply stated, active listening means listening to someone carefully—giving them all your attention with all your senses.

While listening with your ears, you also show the person that you are listening. For example, when the person stops at the end of a sentence or thought, you could indicate that your attention is all on them by verbally responding in some appropriate way. You could say, “Yes, I see” or “Go on” or “Really?”—any short comment that fits the conversation.

At the same time, you can make sure that your nonverbal communication shows that you are receiving. For instance, you can do this by facing toward the person, maintaining eye contact, and maintaining a natural, relaxed posture. All of these actions serve as signals to the person who is speaking that your attention is focused on him/her and that you are receptive to what is being said.

Be Honest

We can talk about being honest by considering sarcasm again. When you use sarcasm, the words you use are not meant to be taken literally. Generally, your real meaning is the opposite of what the words say. You indicate this by putting extra emphasis on part of your message and using facial expressions that reflect your actual meaning. You wrinkle your nose and say “I love Limburger cheese” when you really mean “I hate Limburger cheese.” We have already discussed how this can sometimes be misunderstood by someone who speaks English fluently.

This kind of message is even more easily misunderstood by someone who does not happen to be fluent in English or who has some other communication difficulty. Many students with special needs may fall into this category, for example:

• A mentally challenged student

• A student with limited standard English proficiency

• A hearing-impaired student who is reading your lips but cannot hear your emphasis

• A visually-impaired student who can hear the emphasis but can’t see the smile you softened it with

Unless you consider the special needs of these students, the message stands a good chance of getting lost on the way from the sender to the receiver.

In general, it is always good to follow the rule: Say what you mean, and mean what you say. We have just talked about how it is possible for a message to contain two contradictory thoughts, as in sarcasm. It is equally possible that you are sending contradictory messages at different times.

For example, you may tell a student with a physical disability that you are confident that he/she can perform in class every bit as well as any student. Yet if, over time, you do not provide this student with the same opportunities for practice at the tasks and machines in your classroom as the other students, you are telling him/her that you are not really confident in his/her ability to perform.

It is always necessary to consider the whole approach you take with a student. You should ask yourself if you, in fact, treat the student as your words promise. You might, for example, tell students with learning disabilities that you will allow them all the time they need to acquire and practice the skills you teach in your class. This, in itself, is excellent. You are emphasizing the potential of these students and allowing them to develop this potential to its fullest.

But you must then be sure that you do provide the time necessary for practice. If you do not deliver on your promise, students naturally begin to doubt your honesty. Once again, honest communication serves to maintain credibility. It is one more means to ensure the safe arrival of the message. It prevents the problem of having the communication stopped in transit because the receiver is suspicious of the sender.

We have seen the need for honesty in communication to ensure that the message gets through. However, it is sometimes necessary to keep your “honest” feelings to yourself. You may honestly feel, for example, that a male or female student has no business being in a program nontraditional for their gender. You may not want to see young women in auto mechanics or young men in the cosmetology program.

However, you do have the responsibility and the legal obligation—regardless of your personal opinions and feelings—to act in a nondiscriminatory fashion toward all of your students. Thus, an instructor must provide the young women in his/her auto mechanics class with the same opportunities as the young men. All your students are entitled to fair treatment from you.

You could look at this sort of situation as a trade-off. You have the right to your own opinion, just as your students have the right to be in the program of their choice. In an ideal world, none of us would have any prejudices toward our fellow human beings. But even if our world is not ideal, we still have the responsibility to treat these fellow humans fairly. Of course, when we treat people fairly, we also help accomplish our purpose of keeping the lines of communication open.

Be Fair

Use nondiscriminatory language. In many ways, being fair is like being honest. For example, you need to use nondiscriminatory language—language that does not label someone as different and less worthy. You can hardly expect minority students to be willing to communicate with you if they hear you refer to them using derogatory language, either to their faces or behind their backs.

You also need to pay attention to the generic terms you use in your classroom or laboratory. Generic terms are terms that refer to a whole class or group of things. We are specifically concerned here with the generic terms you use to refer to your students or people in general.

In English, many so-called generic terms are masculine words. We use the term mankind to refer to all humans and the word policemen to refer to all police officers. Also, we use masculine pronouns to refer to groups of mixed gender (e.g. “Everyone should bring his book tomorrow”). The term everyone may include both men and women but we still use the masculine pronoun his to refer to them.

You should avoid using these male-oriented generic terms all of the time. Instead of saying mankind, use humanity or people. Say police officer or firefighter rather than policeman or fireman. Alternate the use of his with the use of her or use his and her. If you don’t care for either of these suggestions, use the plural their.

Ensure that your communication does not humiliate or demean any student. You should also be sure that your communication—both verbal and nonverbal—does not embarrass or belittle any student. Students with special needs want to be treated just like any other student. If you insist on treating them differently, you may embarrass them. If you embarrass them, they may stop asking questions they need to have answered. Whether you are sending or receiving messages, you need to avoid causing any feelings in your students that will prevent the messages from getting through.

Be sensitive to cultural differences in nonverbal communication. So far, in talking about fairness, we have been referring to the verbal and nonverbal communication of American culture. We also need to consider those types of communication reflecting other backgrounds. There are often great differences in communication—especially nonverbal communication—from culture to culture. Differences in nonverbal communication must be taken into account in order to be fair to students.

While you do not need to become a social anthropologist specializing in cross-cultural communication, you should always keep in mind that different cultures use different ways to communicate the same idea. You will surely not want to take the risk of interrupting communication because someone accidentally takes offense. Before you react emotionally to nonverbal messages students send you, you need to be sure you understand the message correctly.

Be sensitive to other nonverbal communication differences. The need to interpret nonverbal communications differently is not limited to cultural differences. Students with other special needs may communicate nonverbal messages that vary from the “norm.” A student who uses a wheelchair, for example, may not always maintain an alert, upright posture. However, you should not assume from this that the student is not paying attention. The student’s physical condition may not allow “correct” posture.

A gifted student may send you streams of nonverbal messages indicating boredom. In interpreting these messages, you should keep in mind that the fact that this student is bored may be a reflection of the student’s greater capacity. The student is not necessarily communicating that your presentation is poor; it simply may not be enough to keep him/her busy. You can act on this message by giving the student more challenging material that will keep him/her interested and involved.

An adult enrolled in a retraining program may seem very distant and formal compared to the younger students in your classes. However, this does not necessarily indicate a dislike for you or your class. Rather, it might reflect a difference in outlook across generations. Someone from an older generation is probably accustomed to more formalized teacher-student relations than are currently prevalent. The adult may merely be trying to live up to standards that were instilled at a young age.

Be sensitive to differences in verbal communication. You can also help assure that messages get through by developing the same kind of understanding of your students’ verbal communication. If a student used a slang term you did not understand, you would probably not hesitate to ask what the term meant. If a student from a different cultural background uses words or expressions you do not know, you should find out what they mean, too. You need to understand your students correctly if their messages to you are going to arrive intact.

Further, your students will be more likely to want to communicate with you if you show that, within reasonable limits, you accept their own communication styles. Here again, you might consider your feelings if the situation were to be reversed. If students sneered at the language you use almost instinctively to communicate, how would you feel? It is only fair to do for them what you would want them to do for you.

Be Understandable

The conscientious efforts that you put into being active, honest, and fair should serve to keep the lines of communication open so that messages (e.g., concerning your technical content) can be sent. However, it does little good to keep the lines open if the messages you send cannot be understood.

It is, of course, the receivers of the messages—your students—who need to understand them. You need to be able to tailor your messages to fit the receivers. Once a message has been tailored and sent, you can then check for proper fit. You will know you have the proper fit when your students can demonstrate their understanding of your messages. How do you go about all this?

Examine your messages. You need to check your messages to see if they have the potential to be understood. For example, when you send out messages (give information, ask questions), do you send them one after another at lightning speed with hardly a pause for breath? If this is the case, you will probably have to learn to slow things down for those students who need more time in order to understand. You may need to develop the habit of pausing for breath and sending out only one message at a time.

Also, you need to take a look at the kinds of words you use. Is your vocabulary appropriate for the beginning career and technical student? Is it appropriate for students with special needs? When you are trying to communicate your subject matter to your students, you must speak in terms they can understand.

A large and extensive vocabulary is a valuable tool. But it is useless as a tool unless both sender and receiver are familiar with it. Thus, you need to use vocabulary that all your students—including those with special needs—can understand.

And your sentences—are they generally of paragraph length? How many different thoughts or ideas do they usually contain? Some students with special needs are likely to be weak in communication skills in the first place. You need to give them new thoughts and ideas one at a time. When you load too much into a single message, your receivers might just throw their hands up in despair at the sheer volume of it all.

Last, you need to examine how consistent you are in presenting new thoughts or skills to your students. You have, no doubt, experienced the frustration of trying to understand people who keep changing subjects as they speak. Remember this frustration when you send out messages in the classroom.

It is important not to present more than one way to perform the new skill you are teaching to your class. It will leave the unskilled receivers perplexed. If you find wisdom in proverbs, remind yourself of this one: Slow and steady wins the race.

Make use of other people—volunteers, classroom aides, paraprofessionals—who could be helpful in fitting your messages to the language skills of students with special needs. A professional or volunteer interpreter, for example, could translate for students with limited English proficiency or for hearing-impaired students. Any volunteer who reads well aloud could serve as a reader for visually impaired students or any other students with low reading skills.

The availability of such personnel varies from situation to situation. Your administration can tell you whether such personnel are available to you.

Tailor your messages to fit your receivers’ frames of reference. A frame of reference is the knowledge or set of attitudes that a person brings to a new experience. A student’s frame of reference includes all past experience with people, things, and events. It forms a structure into which a student fits new information and experiences as they are taken in.

Let’s say that an auto mechanics instructor is introducing her class to gears. She first tells them what a gear is, using a dictionary definition: “A gear is a toothed wheel.” But, by observing actively, she notices that several students are frowning. They apparently do not understand.

What can she do? She might try giving students some examples of gears within their own frames of reference. What gears might her students already be familiar with? Some students would probably know of the gears in a kitchen can opener. Students with bicycles would have observed the gears that drive the chain. Other students may have seen the gears inside a clock or the gears that drive the treads on a tank or bulldozer.

If she could not think of common, everyday examples of gears, she could have rephrased her definition in terms the students could understand. After all, a toothed wheel could be a wheel with teeth on it— literally.

She could have told them: “A gear is like a wheel. But a wheel is flat and smooth on the edge, so that it can roll easily. A gear does not have a flat, smooth edge. The edge of a gear goes in and out. So, the edge of a gear is all points, like the point of a pencil. We call these points teeth…”

You may find it difficult, at times, to tailor your messages to your students’ frames of reference in this fashion. But you will have your reward when you see your messages getting through.

Use other students to help you tailor messages. You may find that you have spent more time than you planned trying to define what a particular word means. Assume that a brave student raises a hand and volunteers to help. After one short sentence of language you may only partially understand, this student may have the entire class nodding their heads in agreement and understanding.

You may find this technique particularly useful in dealing with students with limited English proficiency. You may be able to use a bilingual student to explain points or give instruction to other students whose understanding of English is limited.

Using students to instruct other students is of great benefit to both parties. For the student giving instruction, teaching itself is a learning process. Communicating his/her knowledge to someone else helps to reinforce that knowledge for him/her. While you should not delegate the whole responsibility of teaching to your students, you can often use them very productively to assist you on specific points.

Develop alternate, functional means to get your message across to students with communication deficits, if needed. You cannot, for example, give reading assignments to a visually-impaired student in their usual form. It may be possible to have these assignments transcribed into Braille.

Or, you or a student can make audio recordings of the reading for the visually-impaired student to listen to. These same audio recordings can also be used by any sighted student who has difficulty with reading. Or, you might have a sighted student read the assignment aloud to a visually-impaired student or at least give an oral summary.

If you have a hearing-impaired student who does not lip-read well and cannot hear lessons you present orally, you may be able to locate written materials that present the same information. The student can use these. You could have an interpreter translate into sign language, if possible. You could also find a student who takes good notes and have these notes passed on to the hearing-impaired student.

In general, writing down what you have said and saying aloud what you have written will help many of your students with special needs to receive your messages. In other words, don’t rely on a single communication mode when developing your lesson plans. Use a variety of techniques.

An excellent strategy for use with hearing-impaired students might be for you to learn some basic signs of American Sign Language (ASL). You need not become an expert signer. It would be quite feasible, however, for you to pick up some basic words and perhaps the letters of the alphabet from hearing-impaired students in your classes. Doing so could greatly ease any communication problems with these students. It may also be possible for you to take a short course in ASL as part of your professional development activities.

In addition, signs that show a picture or a symbol can also be used as a functional means of communication. You may already use signs as safety reminders in your laboratory. A red circle attached to a particular door could mean that the door should always be shut. A picture of a cigarette with a line drawn through it could serve as a no-smoking reminder. A picture of goggles and hard hat at the entrance to a room might mean that these must be worn inside.

The use of verbal messages supplemented by these visual reminders allows you to get important messages across to all your CTE students by avoiding those areas in which many students with special needs are lacking in skills. Your messages are tailored to the students’ fit.

There are other functional measures that you can take in your classroom or laboratory to ensure that communication occurs with students with special needs. Visually-impaired students should be seated in the front row, toward the middle of the room, to minimize glare from the windows or to prevent lights from shining in their eyes. Using yellow chalk instead of white to write on the board will serve the same purpose. Likewise, seating hearing-impaired students in the same location will be of great assistance to them. The hearing-impaired student who lip-reads should be as close to you as possible.

Consider your personal mannerisms in speaking. Do you put your hand in front of your mouth while you are talking? Do you face away from the person to whom you are talking? Either of these two mannerisms will make it very difficult for students to read your lips.

Keep in mind also that students with hearing or visual impairments will be unable to receive many of your nonverbal messages. The visually-impaired student cannot see you nod to indicate approval. A hearing-impaired student, even when reading lips, cannot hear the extra emphasis you put on a part of a message to indicate its particular importance.

You will want to take these limitations into account so that you can ensure that your messages arrive safe and sound. One way in which you can do so is by developing the habit of stating all of your messages orally. Don’t just nod to indicate approval—say it in words. Indicate the particular importance of one message or another by saying that it is important.

This doesn’t mean that you cannot or should not send nonverbal messages to your students. Of course, you should continue to do so. But, you need to remember those students who have difficulty receiving nonverbal messages and send that same message verbally so that everyone will understand. You will find that doing so will benefit not only your students with special needs but all students.

Constantly check messages for a proper fit. Has your tailoring been successful? If it has been, your students will be able to demonstrate their understanding to you. You can test for understanding by having the students carry out directions, repeat or paraphrase your explanation, or answer key questions. The student who can tell the instructor that the pointed wheel inside the tank treads is a gear understands what a gear is. The visually impaired student who can answer questions on the content of a reading assignment has understood that assignment.

The student with limited English proficiency who confers with a bilingual classmate and then demonstrates a manipulative skill has an understanding of that skill. The young woman in an auto mechanics class demonstrates understanding of her new automotive vocabulary when she uses it appropriately.

If you develop the habit of testing for understanding—formally or informally—you will be able to spot the messages that don’t get across immediately. Then, you will be able to take action right away before the situation becomes further confused.

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